Summary
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) is facing unprecedented scrutiny following revelations that over ₦61 billion in public funds cannot be properly accounted for, according to a damning audit report that has sent shockwaves through Nigeria’s fiscal oversight community.
The Auditor-General’s 2022 Annual Report on Non-Compliance, recently transmitted to the National Assembly, details 28 separate instances of financial irregularities spanning undocumented payments, unauthorized transfers, tax evasion, and abandoned projects. The questionable transactions involve ₦30.1 billion, $51.6 million, £14.3 million, and €5.17 million—a combined total of approximately ₦61.1 billion when converted to naira.
London Office Spending Raises Red Flags
At the heart of the controversy is NNPC’s London office, which spent £14.3 million during the 2021 financial year without providing adequate documentation. The expenditure breakdown shows £5.9 million for personnel costs, £1.4 million for fixed contracts, and £6.9 million for operational expenses—none of which auditors could verify due to missing paperwork.
Despite NNPC management’s claims that the London office maintains detailed records and operates within approved budgets, the Auditor-General flatly rejected these explanations as “unsatisfactory.” The audit team was neither provided supporting documents nor granted access to verify how taxpayer funds were utilized—a breach of Financial Regulations that mandate clear documentation for all public expenditure.
The Auditor-General’s office pulled no punches in its assessment: “These findings highlight systemic weaknesses that continue to expose public funds to avoidable risk. Where documents were not provided, payments were unjustified. Where approvals were absent, expenditure breached the law. Recovery and sanctions must follow.”
Dollar and Euro Transactions Under Microscope
Foreign currency transactions revealed equally troubling patterns. A European contractor received €5.2 million without any documented evidence of engagement—essentially a payment made in a vacuum. Meanwhile, dollar-denominated irregularities totaling $51.7 million paint a picture of an organization operating with minimal oversight.
Among the most egregious cases: $22.8 million in unsubstantiated Direct Sales Direct Payment settlements; $12.4 million for delayed generator procurement at the Mosimi depot; and $1.8 million paid under an irregular contract extension for a bunkering vessel. Additional queries flagged $2 million in provisional payments made without invoices and over $1 million paid to a company lacking proper power of attorney.
Vessel Substitution Scandal Exposes Procurement Failures
One particularly illuminating case involves the chartered coastal tanker MT Breeze Stavanger. Under a 2017 contract valued at $19,532 per day, the contractor was obligated to deliver this specific vessel for petroleum product transportation. However, just six months into the agreement, the contractor unilaterally substituted MT Alizea—at a significantly higher rate of $21,643.23 daily.
This unauthorized swap created an inflated variance of $2,111.23 per day. Over 30 months, the substitution cost Nigerian taxpayers an additional $1.9 million—money that should never have left public coffers given that contract terms explicitly required vessel replacement at the contractor’s sole expense.
“There was no justification provided for the sudden unavailability of MT Breeze Stavanger after only six months,” auditors noted, describing the arrangement as an “irregular adjustment of contract conditions” that exposed public funds to unnecessary financial risk.
Domestic Infractions Total Over ₦30 Billion
On the naira side of the ledger, violations were equally systemic. The single largest query involves ₦12.7 billion that NNPC failed to remit into its General Reserve Fund—a statutory obligation the corporation simply ignored.
Other significant infractions include: ₦3.4 billion paid by the Chief Financial Officer without the Managing Director’s approval; ₦2.4 billion irregularly disbursed as status-car cash options to staff; ₦1.2 billion paid to contractors without proper documentation; and ₦474 million spent through unauthorized budget transfers known as virements.
The audit also uncovered ₦355 million in demurrage and brokerage payments on abandoned refinery cargoes, ₦292 million for an Accident and Emergency hospital project that was abandoned after mobilization payments, and ₦246 million paid for a contract with no proof of execution whatsoever.
Perhaps most troubling from a governance perspective: ₦6.2 billion in payments made entirely without supporting documents, with NNPCL accounting for the largest share of this cross-governmental audit concern.
Tax Collection Failures Shortchange Federal Revenue
Beyond spending irregularities, NNPC also failed to apply statutory tax deductions across multiple transactions—directly depriving the federal government of revenue. Auditors identified ₦247 million and $529,863 in non-deducted Value Added Tax, Withholding Tax, and Stamp Duty. Another transaction saw $8,355 paid without any statutory tax deductions applied.
An additional ₦46.2 million in under-deducted withholding tax was never remitted to government coffers, compounding the revenue losses.
Pattern of Procurement Violations
The audit reveals a concerning pattern of circumventing procurement controls throughout NNPC’s operations. Beyond the vessel substitution scandal, auditors flagged an “emergency procurement” of custody transfer meters costing $8.2 million without proper justification, $156,000 paid to a consultant without evidence of engagement, and the regular renewal of consultancy contracts—some involving ₦145.9 million—instead of conducting fresh competitive bidding as regulations require.
In one bizarre case, NNPC paid what it termed a “legacy debt” to the wrong company entirely, suggesting either gross negligence or deliberate misdirection of funds.
Auditor-General Demands Accountability
The Auditor-General’s office has issued sweeping recommendations that could have profound consequences for NNPC’s leadership. The report demands that the Group Chief Executive Officer appear before the Public Accounts Committees of the National Assembly to explain the utilization of the disputed £14.3 million spent by the London office.
More dramatically, the audit directs the recovery and remittance of the entire amount to the Treasury, warning that failure to comply should trigger sanctions against responsible officers as outlined in Financial Regulations paragraphs 3106 and 3115.
The report minces no words: “Where officers fail to provide the required documents, the sums shall be recovered from them directly.”
This personal liability clause represents a significant escalation in accountability measures, potentially exposing individual NNPC executives to financial consequences for the corporation’s systemic failures.
NNPC Pushes Back, But Questions Remain
NNPC management has attempted to defend its operations, arguing that budget queries lack specificity and that the corporation maintains comprehensive transaction records. The company expressed willingness to provide documentation upon request and claimed commitment to improving internal controls.
However, this response rings hollow given that auditors were denied access to verification documents during the official audit process—the very time when such cooperation is both required and expected under Financial Regulations.
The Auditor-General’s office dismissed NNPC’s explanations, insisting the queries remain valid until full accountability is provided and corrective actions implemented.
Implications for Nigeria’s Oil Revenue Management
These findings arrive at a particularly sensitive moment for Nigeria’s petroleum sector. As the country grapples with fuel subsidy reforms, foreign exchange pressures, and calls for greater transparency in oil revenue management, this audit report underscores the governance challenges that have long plagued NNPC.
The corporation’s transformation from a state-owned enterprise to a limited liability company under the Petroleum Industry Act was meant to usher in an era of commercial discipline and accountability. Instead, this audit suggests that old habits of opaque financial management have persisted even under the new corporate structure.
With ₦61 billion in questionable transactions—equivalent to significant portions of state budgets for education, healthcare, or infrastructure—the stakes extend far beyond NNPC’s balance sheet. These are funds that could have built hospitals, schools, or roads in a country where millions lack access to basic services.
What Happens Next
All eyes now turn to the National Assembly’s Public Accounts Committees, which must decide whether to summon NNPC executives for questioning and what consequences should follow if satisfactory explanations are not forthcoming.
The Auditor-General has laid down a clear marker: recovery, remittance, and sanctions must follow. Whether Nigeria’s lawmakers have the political will to enforce accountability against one of the nation’s most powerful institutions remains to be seen.
For ordinary Nigerians watching fuel prices fluctuate and wondering where oil revenues disappear to, this audit provides a troubling answer: into a black hole of undocumented payments, unauthorized transfers, and weak internal controls that the Auditor-General warns expose public funds to “avoidable risk.”
The question now is whether this damning report will catalyze genuine reform or join the long list of audit findings that gather dust while business continues as usual.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Auditor-General has uncovered ₦61 billion in unaccounted funds at NNPC across 28 financial irregularities. The core issue is simple but devastating: NNPC spent billions of taxpayer money without proper documentation, approvals, or oversight.
- ₦61 billion cannot be properly accounted for through missing receipts, unauthorized payments, and abandoned projects
- NNPC’s London office spent £14.3 million with zero supporting documents provided to auditors
- Systemic breakdown: Contractors were overpaid, taxes went uncollected, statutory funds weren’t remitted, and procurement rules were routinely violated
- Personal accountability demanded: The Auditor-General wants NNPC executives to appear before lawmakers and recover the missing funds—or face sanctions and personal liability
Nigeria’s oil giant operated with virtually no financial controls, exposing public funds to what auditors call “avoidable risk” of diversion and misappropriation. The ₦61 billion in questionable spending could have funded critical infrastructure, healthcare, and education in a country desperately needing those services.























